The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Commission takes up Hunter ethics complaint today,

Commission­er faces public reprimand for Facebook post.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

In the week or so that online comments were solicited, roughly 330 people shared their thoughts on the ethics complaint pending against Gwinnett County Commission­er Tommy Hunter.

On Tuesday, Hunter’s colleagues will make their own thoughts on the matter known — by deciding, once and for all, if he should be punished for his divisive social media activity.

The ethics complaint filed Feb. 6 argued that, with Facebook posts like his now-infamous one calling civil rights icon and U.S. Rep. John Lewis a “racist pig,” the commission­er violated multiple tenets of the county’s 2011 ethics ordinance. The ethics board assembled to investigat­e the complaint agreed with that assessment earlier this month, recommendi­ng the stiffest penalty available to county commission­ers — that Hunter be publicly reprimande­d.

That reprimand would involve posting a written rebuke on the county’s website, on the wall of its courthouse and in the local newspaper.

Commission Chair Charlotte Nash said she expects her board to vote on the matter during a public hearing scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. One hour has been set aside for public comment in support of the ethics board’s recommenda­tion and one hour for those against.

A significan­t number of anti-Hunter protesters is likely to be present. Detractors have attended every Board of Commission­ers meeting since Jan. 17, the board’s first gathering after Hunter’s post about Lewis.

Activist Donna McLeod called Tuesday’s hearing a “day of reckoning.”

“We need to pack the auditorium with those who are in favor of the ethics panel’s recommenda­tions, even those who do not wish to speak,” McLeod wrote in an email to supporters. “This will be a great opportunit­y to send a message ... to hold Tommy Hunter accountabl­e.”

Gabe Okoye, the chairman of the Gwinnett County Democratic Party, said he wants to “see justice done.” Protesters have long called for Hunter’s resignatio­n or ouster but Okoye said that, if the Board of Commission­ers follows the ethics panel’s recommenda­tion, their efforts would be worthwhile.

“If we get the maximum out of a process, that’s a resounding success in my opinion,” he said.

Seth Weathers, Hunter’s political consultant and spokesman, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Monday. He has called Gwinnett’s ethics board “entirely unconstitu­tional.”

That argument is also one basis for a lawsuit filed by Hunter’s attorney, Dwight Thomas. The suit, which argues counties shouldn’t use private entities to make ethics boards appointmen­ts, is still being litigated and could eventually affect whatever decision is reached Tuesday.

Thomas has also tried to frame the ethics complaint against Hunter as a First Amendment issue.

“I think it will be setting a dangerous precedent for (the Board of Commission­ers) to do anything,” he said.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Gwinnett Co. Commission­er Tommy Hunter insulted U.S. Rep. John Lewis.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Gwinnett Co. Commission­er Tommy Hunter insulted U.S. Rep. John Lewis.

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